Mark Montieth: Indy’s sports stars of yesteryear earned peanuts for endorsements
It’s safe to assume it’s a stratosphere or two beyond what the local stars of yesteryear received for their humble endorsements.
It’s safe to assume it’s a stratosphere or two beyond what the local stars of yesteryear received for their humble endorsements.
The problem isn’t the difference in approach—it’s whether you can discuss and navigate these differences without causing financial (or emotional) ruin.
Lawmakers must seek to balance the needs of local government with what it’s fair to ask the public to pay.
The ballooning size of government and spiraling deficits are serious threats to our economic vitality and freedoms.
Instead of forming a new state, the Illinois counties that voted to pursue secession should join us in a state that shares their values and economic interests.
Fiduciary responsibility is about securing strong financial returns for Indiana. That responsibility compels me to stand against woke corporations pushing political motives.
While our efforts abroad strengthen Bangalore, Cape Town, Kampala and beyond, they also make our own community more connected, inspired and stronger.
When we can get above the line, we start to see that, while real events present real challenges, none of us is powerless and at the mercy of the world psychologically.
It would be great if the city’s new economic development organization could fix the byzantine, slow and unresponsive permitting process.
Trust between an employer and an employee begins with a clear company mission and strong core values and goals.
Not raising rates, of course, enriches the banks.
In college and professional sports history, the state of Indiana hasn’t produced many dynasties, but several teams have had notable runs.
We don’t see a need to inject more politics into school boards.
Jackson is gathering information about Indiana for a class project. He asked if I would post his request as a letter to the editor. But I thought it would be more fun to put it here
The governor is right to emphasize nuclear energy, in particular. Despite our industrial heritage and demand for abundant, reliable energy, Indiana has no nuclear generation.
The world requires a more skilled, more educated workforce than ever. By 2031, three out of four jobs will require some kind of post-secondary education and/or training.
Women are each other’s greatest resource, and when we come together to educate and motivate one another, we can save lives.
And you should stop viewing advisers as disposable.
But our bodies are not just vehicles for our minds. They are finely tuned instruments that send signals to communicate with us.
Randomly determining which firms win the visas is the gold standard for what economists call a “natural experiment” on the impact of H1-B visas on economic outcomes.